It’s the most fiercely debated title in music — no trophy, no committee, no official vote. Just the collective will of millions of listeners, a perfect melody at the right moment, and a summer that refuses to let go. Based on Billboard’s Hot 100, streaming data, radio airplay, the pulse of what’s rising right now, and good ol’ fashion guessing – here are the 20 songs fighting to be the soundtrack of your summer.
Ella Langley, “Choosin’ Texas”
The front-runner, full stop. Ten non-consecutive weeks at No. 1 on the Hot 100, the most of any song this year, and it keeps coming back. A ballad about longing and love lost against a wide-open landscape, it crossed far beyond country radio and planted itself deep in the mainstream. Every other contender has to beat this one first.
Bruno Mars, “I Just Might”
The Aura Lord is back, and he announced it with a disco-funk banger loaded with brass, soul, and a bassline that won’t leave you alone. Lead single off his first solo album in nearly a decade, it debuted at No. 1 and has the bones of a true summer perennial. This is what it sounds like when someone returns with zero apologies.
Olivia Rodrigo, “Drop Dead”
She knocked “Choosin’ Texas” off the summit in its debut week, making her the only artist ever to lead the Hot 100 with the lead singles off her first three albums. Moving away from pop-punk into mid-tempo alt-rock grooves, Rodrigo sounds sharper and stranger than ever. Less heartbreak diary, more confident gut punch.
Kehlani, “Folded” Sultry, minimalist, and deeply sensual, “Folded” is Kehlani at their most stripped back and their most devastating. Grammy-nominated for Best R&B Song and Best R&B Performance, it inspired covers from Brandy, Tank, and Jacquees. When legends start covering your single, you know it has burrowed deep into the culture.
Olivia Dean, “Man I Need” Britain’s biggest breakout story of the last 18 months has been running on the Hot 100 for 37 weeks and shows no sign of fading. Warm, soulful, and emotionally direct, it’s the kind of slow-burn record that rewards every repeat listen. With Dean headlining Lollapalooza, this song is about to be heard by an awful lot of people who don’t know it yet.
PinkPantheress ft. Zara Larsson, “Stateside” Two of pop’s most distinct personalities, PinkPantheress’s UK glitch-pop instincts and Larsson’s Scandinavian radio magnetism, collide into something genuinely irresistible. It returned to No. 1 on global Spotify with over 5 million streams in a single day and got a massive boost from the Winter Olympics. This is the summer collab that already won.
Ella Langley, “Be Her”
Yes, she’s on this list twice, because she’s currently holding two songs in the Hot 100 top two simultaneously. “Be Her” just climbed to No. 2, proving Langley is no one-song phenomenon. It deepens her emotional world and strengthens her claim on the entire season. Two top-two entries at once. The year belongs to her.
Sombr, “Back to Friends”
The quiet juggernaut. Over 50 weeks on the Hot 100, an AMA New Artist of the Year nomination, and a Lollapalooza slot, all for an indie-pop heartbreak song that arrived with almost no fanfare. Sombr’s bittersweet sound is perfectly calibrated for that specific summer feeling, the one that already knows it won’t last.
Alex Warren, “Ordinary”
Sixty-four weeks on the Hot 100. That number alone deserves a moment of silence. Warren’s grandiose power ballad has outlasted trends, seasons, and its own hype cycle. It won’t win Song of the Summer in the cool-factor debate, but it will absolutely be playing at every cookout, every wedding, and every drive-home moment from Memorial Day to Labor Day.
Noah Kahan, “Doors”
Off his No. 1 album The Great Divide, “Doors” debuted top 10 on both the Hot 100 and the UK Singles Chart in its very first week. Kahan’s folk-indie introspection is built for open windows and long drives, music that makes a Tuesday feel significant. If the album cycle builds momentum heading into summer, this could be the dark horse that surprises everyone.
Michael Jackson, “Billie Jean”
It’s 1983 and it’s also right now. “Billie Jean” has re-entered the UK Singles Chart top 10 in 2026 alongside “Beat It” and “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough,” part of a full-scale Michael Jackson resurgence that no algorithm planned and no label engineered, except for a docudrama that had more drama at the launch that doc. The people just went back. A song this structurally perfect, that bassline, that tension, that vocal, doesn’t age because it was never really of its time to begin with. Every generation finds it and thinks they discovered it. This summer will be no different.
BTS, “Swim”
Their seventh single to debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100, landing during one of the most anticipated K-pop comebacks in recent memory. The song is propulsive, aquatic-themed, and built for festival season. With global stanning power behind it and the group firing on all cylinders, “Swim” could dominate playlists from Seoul to São Paulo all summer long.
Justin Bieber, “Daisies”
Bieber’s comeback has been one of the year’s most discussed stories, and “Daisies” is the tender, emotionally open side of that rebirth. Seventeen weeks in the Hot 100 top 10, boosted further by a post-Coachella surge, it’s the rare Bieber record that feels like a sunset rather than a stadium. Summer suits it perfectly.
Sabrina Carpenter, “Manchild”
Her mid-tempo, vaguely retro pop has become so dominant that every emerging artist reportedly has a “Sabrina song” in their drafts folder. “Manchild” debuted at No. 1 but faced stiff competition holding it, a reflection of how ruthlessly competitive 2026 is, not a failing of the track. Witty, sharp, deceptively breezy. Peak Carpenter summer mode.
RAYE, “Where Is My Husband!”
Off her orchestrally rich second album, RAYE pairs her extraordinarily versatile vocals with a massive brass band in one of the year’s most maximalist and critically praised moments. Theatrical, emotionally raw, and impossible to ignore. If summer 2026 wants a showstopper with actual substance, RAYE has already built it.
Bad Bunny, “DtMF”
Riding the post-Super Bowl halftime bump, Bad Bunny leapt from No. 10 to No. 1 in a single week, a testament to his unmatched cultural force. He placed four separate entries in the Hot 100 top 10 this year alone. A summer without a Bad Bunny anthem would feel incomplete, and the Latin heat of “DtMF” is built for warm nights and loud speakers.
Dominic Fike, “Babydoll”
Posted the biggest streaming gain on the Hot 100 for multiple consecutive weeks and charted simultaneously in the UK top 10 alongside its twin track “White Keys.” Fike’s genre-fluid sound, part indie, part pop, part something harder to name, is exactly the kind of left-field breakout that earns Song of the Summer cult status. The surprise pick on every list.
Harry Styles, “Aperture”
His triumphant return after winning Album of the Year at the Grammys launched “Aperture” straight to No. 1. The follow-up campaign, including the climbing “American Girls,” confirms he’s in a career-defining stretch. Styles has the rare combination of critical credibility and mainstream pull to make any song he chooses a summer touchstone.
HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna & Rei Ami, “Golden”
The most intriguing entry on this list. A three-voice collective that hit No. 1 and held the top 10 for 39 weeks, nominated for Song of the Year at the AMAs, and impossible to file neatly into any single genre. Densely harmonized, K-pop adjacent, R&B-rooted, and alt-pop forward all at once. This is the sound of 2026’s genre-blurring era at its most thrilling.
Olivia Dean ft. Sam Fender, “Rein Me In”
An unexpected and celebrated transatlantic pairing: Dean’s soulful warmth alongside Fender’s working-class Britpop grit, and the combination topped the UK Singles Chart. With both artists carrying massive festival profiles this summer, Dean headlining Lollapalooza and Fender on every major European bill, “Rein Me In” is positioned to be one of the season’s most performed and most shared songs. The one that sneaks up on you.


